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alirezarezvani

Company Os

by Alireza Rezvani · GitHub ↗ · v2.1.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install company-os
Description
The meta-framework for how a company runs — the connective tissue between all C-suite roles. Covers operating system selection (EOS, Scaling Up, OKR-native,...
README (SKILL.md)

Company Operating System

The operating system is the collection of tools, rhythms, and agreements that determine how the company functions. Every company has one — most just don't know what it is. Making it explicit makes it improvable.

Keywords

operating system, EOS, Entrepreneurial Operating System, Scaling Up, Rockefeller Habits, OKR, Holacracy, L10 meeting, rocks, scorecard, accountability chart, issues list, IDS, meeting pulse, quarterly planning, weekly scorecard, management framework, company rhythm, traction, Gino Wickman, Verne Harnish

Why This Matters

Most operational dysfunction isn't a people problem — it's a system problem. When:

  • The same issues recur every week: no issue resolution system
  • Meetings feel pointless: no structured meeting pulse
  • Nobody knows who owns what: no accountability chart
  • Quarterly goals slip: rocks aren't real commitments

Fix the system. The people will operate better inside it.

The Six Core Components

Every effective operating system has these six, regardless of which framework you choose:

1. Accountability Chart

Not an org chart. An accountability chart answers: "Who owns this outcome?"

Key distinction: One person owns each function. Multiple people may work in it. Ownership means the buck stops with one person.

Structure:

CEO
├── Sales (CRO/VP Sales)
│   ├── Inbound pipeline
│   └── Outbound pipeline
├── Product & Engineering (CTO/CPO)
│   ├── Product roadmap
│   └── Engineering delivery
├── Operations (COO)
│   ├── Customer success
│   └── Finance & Legal
└── People (CHRO/VP People)
    ├── Recruiting
    └── People operations

Rules:

  • No shared ownership. "Alice and Bob both own it" means nobody owns it.
  • One person can own multiple seats at early stages. That's fine. Just be explicit.
  • Revisit quarterly as you scale. Ownership shifts as the company grows.

Build it in a workshop:

  1. List all functions the company performs
  2. Assign one owner per function — no exceptions
  3. Identify gaps (functions nobody owns) and overlaps (functions two people think they own)
  4. Publish it. Update it when something changes.

2. Scorecard

Weekly metrics that tell you if the company is on track. Not monthly. Not quarterly. Weekly.

Rules:

  • 5–15 metrics maximum. More than 15 and nothing gets attention.
  • Each metric has an owner and a weekly target (not a range — a number).
  • Red/yellow/green status. Not paragraphs.
  • The scorecard is discussed at the leadership team weekly meeting. Only red metrics get discussion time.

Example scorecard structure:

Metric Owner Target This Week Status
New MRR CRO €50K €43K 🔴
Churn CS Lead \x3C 1% 0.8% 🟢
Active users CPO 2,000 2,150 🟢
Deployments CTO 3/week 3 🟢
Open critical bugs CTO 0 2 🔴
Runway CFO > 18mo 16mo 🟡

Anti-pattern: Measuring everything. If you track 40 KPIs, you're watching, not managing.

3. Meeting Pulse

The meeting rhythm that drives the company. Not optional — the pulse is what keeps the company alive.

The full rhythm:

Meeting Frequency Duration Who Purpose
Daily standup Daily 15 min Each team Blockers only
L10 / Leadership sync Weekly 90 min Leadership team Scorecard + issues
Department review Monthly 60 min Dept + leadership OKR progress
Quarterly planning Quarterly 1–2 days Leadership Set rocks, review strategy
Annual planning Annual 2–3 days Leadership 1-year + 3-year vision

The L10 meeting (Weekly Leadership Sync): Named for the goal of each meeting being a 10/10. Fixed agenda:

  1. Good news (5 min) — personal + business
  2. Scorecard review (5 min) — flag red items only
  3. Rock review (5 min) — on/off track for each rock
  4. Customer/employee headlines (5 min)
  5. Issues list (60 min) — IDS (see below)
  6. To-dos review (5 min) — last week's commitments
  7. Conclude (5 min) — rate the meeting 1–10, what would make it a 10 next time

4. Issue Resolution (IDS)

The core problem-solving loop. Maximum 15 minutes per issue.

IDS: Identify, Discuss, Solve

  • Identify: What is the actual issue? (Not the symptom — the root cause) State it in one sentence.
  • Discuss: Relevant facts + perspectives. Time-boxed. When discussion starts repeating, stop.
  • Solve: One owner. One action. One due date. Written on the to-do list.

Anti-patterns:

  • "Let's take this offline" — most things taken offline never get resolved
  • Discussing without deciding — a great discussion with no action item is wasted time
  • Revisiting decided issues — once solved, it leaves the list. Reopen only with new information.

The Issues List: A running, prioritized list of all unresolved issues. Owned by the leadership team. Reviewed and pruned weekly. If an issue has been on the list for 3+ meetings and hasn't been discussed, it's either not a real issue or it's too scary to address — both deserve attention.

5. Rocks (90-Day Priorities)

Rocks are the 3–7 most important things each person must accomplish in the next 90 days. They're not the job description — they're the things that move the company forward.

Why 90 days? Long enough for meaningful progress. Short enough to stay real.

Rock rules:

  • Each person: 3–7 rocks maximum. More than 7 and none get done.
  • Company-level rocks (shared priorities): 3–7 for the leadership team
  • Each rock is binary: done or not done. No "60% complete."
  • Set at the quarterly planning session. Reviewed weekly (on/off track).

Bad rock: "Improve our sales process" Good rock: "Implement Salesforce CRM with full pipeline stages and weekly reporting by March 31"

Rock vs. to-do: A to-do takes one action. A rock takes 90 days of consistent work.

6. Communication Cadence

Who gets what information, when, and how.

Audience What When Format
All employees Company update Monthly Written + Q&A
All employees Quarterly results + next priorities Quarterly All-hands
Leadership team Scorecard Weekly Dashboard
Board Company performance Monthly Board memo
Investors Key metrics + narrative Monthly or quarterly Investor update
Customers Product updates Per release Release notes

Default rule: If you're deciding whether to share something internally, share it. The cost of under-communication always exceeds the cost of over-communication inside a company.


Operating System Selection

See references/os-comparison.md for full comparison. Quick guide:

If you are... Consider...
10–250 person company, founder-led, operational chaos EOS / Traction
Ambitious growth company, need rigorous strategy cascade Scaling Up
Tech company, engineering culture, hypothesis-driven OKR-native
Decentralized, flat, high autonomy Holacracy (only if you're patient)
None of the above quite fit Custom hybrid

Implementation Roadmap

Don't implement everything at once. See references/implementation-guide.md for the full 90-day plan.

Quick start (first 30 days):

  1. Build the accountability chart (1 workshop, 2 hours)
  2. Define 5–10 weekly scorecard metrics (leadership team alignment, 1 hour)
  3. Start the weekly L10 meeting (no prep — just start)

These three alone will improve coordination more than most companies achieve in a year.


Common Failure Modes

Partial implementation: "We do OKRs but skip the weekly check-in." Half an operating system is worse than none — it creates theater without accountability.

Meeting fatigue: Adding the full rhythm on top of existing meetings. Start by replacing meetings, not adding them.

Metric overload: Starting with 30 KPIs because "they all matter." Start with 5. Add when the cadence is established.

Rock inflation: Setting 12 rocks per person because "everything is a priority." When everything is a priority, nothing is. Hard limit: 7.

Leader non-compliance: Leadership team skips the L10 or doesn't follow IDS. The operating system mirrors the respect leadership gives it. If leaders don't take it seriously, nobody will.

Annual planning without quarterly review: Setting annual goals and checking in at year-end. Quarterly is the minimum review cycle for any meaningful goal.


Integration with C-Suite

The company OS is the connective tissue. Every other role depends on it:

C-Suite Role OS Dependency
CEO Sets vision that feeds into 1-year plan and rocks
COO Owns the meeting pulse and issue resolution cadence
CFO Owns the financial metrics in the scorecard
CTO Owns engineering rocks and tech scorecard metrics
CHRO Owns people metrics (attrition, hiring velocity) in scorecard
Culture Architect Culture rituals plug into the meeting pulse
Strategic Alignment Engine Validates that team rocks cascade from company rocks

Key Questions for the Operating System

  • "If I asked five different team leads what the company's top 3 priorities are this quarter, would they give the same answers?"
  • "What was the most important issue raised in last week's leadership meeting? Was it resolved or is it still open?"
  • "Name a metric that would tell us by Friday whether this week was a good week. Do we track it?"
  • "Who owns customer churn? Can you name that person without hesitation?"
  • "When was the last time we updated the accountability chart?"

Detailed References

  • references/os-comparison.md — EOS vs Scaling Up vs OKRs vs Holacracy vs hybrid
  • references/implementation-guide.md — 90-day implementation plan
Usage Guidance
This skill is an instruction-only playbook for company operating systems and appears internally consistent. Things to consider before installing: 1) The author/source is unknown — content is benign but provenance is limited. 2) The docs recommend using external tools (Notion, Miro, Google Docs, Ninety.io); do not provide API keys or service tokens to the agent unless you trust it and want it to create/update those documents automatically. 3) If you enable autonomous invocation for the agent, consider restricting integrations that allow write access to collaboration tools or calendars so the agent cannot post or change company documents without approval. 4) Review any outputs the skill creates (templates, accountability charts, scorecards) before sharing broadly. Overall: coherent and appropriate for its stated purpose.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: company-os Version: 2.1.1 The skill bundle is a purely informational framework for company operations management, covering methodologies like EOS, Scaling Up, and OKRs. It contains only Markdown documentation (SKILL.md, implementation-guide.md, os-comparison.md) and metadata, with no executable code, scripts, or instructions that would lead to data exfiltration or unauthorized system access.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name and description match the actual content: detailed guidance on accountability charts, scorecards, meeting rhythms, IDS, rocks, implementation steps and comparisons between frameworks. The skill does not request unrelated binaries, credentials, or config paths.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md and reference docs are purely prescriptive (workshop steps, meeting agendas, templates, document suggestions). They do not instruct the agent to read local files, access environment variables, run commands, or transmit data to hidden endpoints.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files — instruction-only. Nothing is downloaded or written to disk by the skill itself.
Credentials
The skill does not declare or require any environment variables or credentials. It references external collaboration tools (Notion, Miro, Ninety.io, Google Docs) as implementation options — if you later grant this agent tokens or integrations for those services, expect it could create/update documents. The skill itself does not request those secrets.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill is user-invocable. The agent may invoke it autonomously by default (platform normal), but the skill does not seek elevated or permanent presence or modify other skills.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install company-os
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /company-os
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v2.1.1
v2.1.1: optimization, reference splits
v1.0.0
Initial release.
Metadata
Slug company-os
Version 2.1.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 3
Active Installs 3
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Company Os?

The meta-framework for how a company runs — the connective tissue between all C-suite roles. Covers operating system selection (EOS, Scaling Up, OKR-native,... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 339 downloads so far.

How do I install Company Os?

Run "/install company-os" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Company Os free?

Yes, Company Os is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Company Os support?

Company Os is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Company Os?

It is built and maintained by Alireza Rezvani (@alirezarezvani); the current version is v2.1.1.

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